New Orleans takes a second art stroll, Veronica Russell leaves a gap, trumpeter Shamarr Allen gets roughed up, "Boyhood" gets five stars, and a subdude is remembered. Here are five headlines from the world of New Orleans entertainment this week (Aug. 4-10) in our Sunday Rewind.

"The crowd clustered under awnings and balconies. Though the summer weather had been patient, Dirty Linen Night finally became Damp Linen Night -- as we all feared it eventually would. The big block party was scheduled to continue until 10, but, for some of us, it was time to scamper home between the droplets."

"It's such a trite word to use, but Veronica's one of those few people I know who has true taste," Dane Rhodes said. "To actually have a sense of true cultural sense of taste, to be able to mix things and putting them together and making it work. ... Chefs obviously do this. Veronica can do that. And she does it in all aspects. She has a true sense of culture and design. She was about the art of it."

"It's just wrong," Allen told NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune on Tuesday after watching the video. "I don't drink, I don't smoke, I don't do none of that. I don't live wrong at all. It's just, this is the life of a black man in the Lower 9th Ward."

The greatest movies, the ones that stick with us, are those that hold up a mirror to the human condition and reflect something back at us that we too often manage to overlook. "Boyhood" is one of those movies, and with it Linklater proves he is among the best practitioners of that art.